Easy Meatballs – Nutrient Dense Food on the Go

People often ask me, “How do you always have nutrient dense food ready to dine on at home AND on the go? Where do you find the time?” I haven’t found secret pockets of time, although I’m still searching. I do however, stock my refrigerator and freezer with nutrient dense fast food. Life can be fast paced and chaotic. That will likely never change so I make versatile foods like these nutrient dense, easy meatballs.

I grew up ducking and dodging through the back kitchen of my parents’ delicatessens. They used to make an amazing meatball sub. I now make my meatball sub on sourdough and it is INSANE. I usually make a large batch of meatballs (child labor for meatball rolling encouraged – *wink, wink*) so, feel free to double and triple this recipe to fit your needs and time. If you’re looking for ways to disguise liver for your family or just like being a super human, try adding some ground liver to the mix.

I like to make quite a few batches of easy meatballs and store some in the freezer and some in the fridge. I sometimes eat them cold as I’m running out the door. I take them with me on airplane flights. Three or four of these meaty morsels simmered in a cup of bone broth with a little side of sauerkraut is wonderful. I also like to make large batches of reduction sauce and freeze small portions which makes a lovely pairing. In fact, these are great with reduction sauce, dipping sauce, marinara or cheese. For an instant dinner, just cook up some rice or veggies and throw them on top. Perfect for a meatball soup or Italian wedding soup.

Just last week, I had friends popping over last minute and just scattered these babies on a plate with a tooth pick, a thin slice of pecorino and a basil leaf. Instant appetizer!!! Get Real. Be Well.

Easy Meatballs Method

In another bowl, beat eggs until combined and then add to meat mixture and combine.

Roll the meatballs to any size that works for you. Or you can make batches of small meatballs and a few batches of larger meatballs and bag them separately in your fridge.

Pop meatballs into muffin tins or on baking sheet and bake in oven preheated to 375° for approximately 20 minutes or until the center of a meatball is done.

By the way – I love to make Asian, Irish and Greek versions of these easy meatballs as well. Let me know if those are recipes you would like to see in the future!

Active Time: 30 minutes

Yield: 16-20 meatballs

This post was generously contributed by Monica Ford of Real Food Devotee. If you’re lucky enough to live in Los Angeles, Real Food Devotee can make your life easier by delivering nutrient dense goodies directly to your door.

Actually, I cook them and then store in frige or freezer. Then they are just ready to go. Peale actually love these. It’s the feeling of a nurturing food your prepared in your kitchen with and the time in vestment is minimal! Wondrous!

Look at that comment. Can you tell I posted it using my iPhone and Siri? Let’s try that again.
“Actually, I cook them and then store in frige or freezer. Then they are just ready to go. People actually LOVE these. They give the feeling of a nurturing food you’ve prepared in your kitchen and the time investment is minimal! Wondrous!”

Hi @Drew
You have quite a few options as to when you might add sauerkraut.
I love eating sauerkraut as a side dish with any meal but, particularly cooked meals as it imbues my eating experience and digestion with much appreciated enzyme fueled efficiency.
When I warm my meat balls in a a little bone broth for quick a soup-ish meal, I drop a few spoonfuls of sauerkraut into the broth after I’ve taken it off the heat keeping those lovely enzymes intact.
You might also enjoy adding a half cup of sauerkraut (squeeze the juice out with your hands first) to your raw meatball mix. It adds a lovely level of taste to the meatballs.
Let us know what you try!! xo

These would take no time to make if you use a small scoop to form the meatballs. Chef John of Foodwishes.com says rough meatballs just have extra flavor pockets, or something like that. Then place them on the top rack of your oven and broil them for about 5 minutes. You can turn them and broil the other side if you like, but not necessary. Can’t wait to try this recipe!

Can I ask, why saurkraut? I put everything but the kitchen sink into ground beef anything, but I have never put fermented foods. I guess i thought they would lose their appeal when I was cooking. So here I am curious and asking because I have no idea

Hi @Angela
You can substitute 1 piece of sourdough bread soaked in milk or butter milk/egg or you can just omit the egg. The egg or soaked bread adds more moisture but, it will still be utterly delicious without it. Please let us know how it turns out! xo

Hi Monica,
Do I need to cook or soak the barley ahead of time or can I just add it raw? These sound great! (though I’m too afraid to add the liver – my husband has a very keen sense of taste and I’m afraid if he noticed the flavor that he wouldn’t eat them! )
You said you make Irish meatballs as well? I’d love to see that recipe too! Thanks so much for sharing them!

I made them and it was a “Fear Factor” experience for me with the liver. Also my meatballs ended up more like meat patties. Not sure why they wouldn’t hold their shape. My sister and husband loved it and my 2 year old ate it. So I know it’s a good recipe!!! I doubled the recipe, but I think next time I will only add 1/4 lb liver with the doubled recipe. Thanks for having such an awesome site. I love all your posts!!

Wow! So easy! I just put a batch in the oven. I can’t believe the number of times we bought a frozen bag of meatballs from the store in the past. Trying these with some beef bone broth gravy, rice, and veggies!

Welcome to my little cove of the cyber sea. I'm Emily, a.k.a. Holistic Squid. I live in the mountains above Malibu, CA. I'm a mom, acupuncturist, and blogger in love with real food and healthy living. I write from my heart about topics that move me, and share recipes that will nourish your soul. Let's dive in.